generate efficiencies

With a wealth of information readily available online, consumers are now better able to compare products, services and prices—even as they shop in physical stores. When consumers interact with retailers publicly through social media, they have greater power to influence other customers or damage a brand. These and other changes in the retail industry are creating important opportunities for retailers. But to capitalize on those opportunities, retailers need ways to collect, manage and analyze a tremendous volume, variety and velocity of data.
If retailers succeed in addressing the challenges of “big data,” they can use this data to generate valuable insights for personalizing marketing and improving the effectiveness of marketing campaigns, optimizing assortment and merchandising decisions, and removing inefficiencies in distribution and operations.

Does your work enviornment look anything like that of the popular TV sitcom The Office? Probably not. If your company is like most businesses, it’s highly unlikely you see coworkers regularly communicating face to face. And there’s a good chance those type of meetings will continue to decline, according to
the latest statistics.
The mobility trend has been accelerating in just the past few years. By the end of 2015, 38 percent of the world’s workforce will be mobile. That’s up 65% since 2011, reports Forrester Research.
So what have you been doing to help your company adjust to this evolving workplace?
If your answer is “not much” or “a few tweaks here and there,” you could be missing out on significant opportunities to generate efficiencies that could impact your company’s bottom line. Today, more companies are discovering that email, file sharing and other traditional methods of collaborating and completing tasks just don't cut it - especially with employees who are accustomed to

It is time to finally get over the misconceptions generated by the loud and misleading rhetoric regarding the superior efficiencies of close-coupled and liquid cooled server cabinet solutions, as well as the supposed limits on power densities that can be effectively cooled by air